Forget it. I had an e-mail from someone who was mad that I hadn't replied or used the recipe sent in.
If I don't reply, I didn't get your e-mail. It may have gone to spam. You can always e-mail me at common_ills@yahoo.com especially if you think you might have been overlooked. Why there? C.I. has many people working that account. Martha and Shirley are especially good at letting me know there are e-mails to read. If you're e-mailing to me, I'm going through it myself and I'm not checking spam so if it goes in there it just stays in there.
This site was a way to note that we were in a bad economy. That was the main reason The second reason was that I do give a damn about the Iraq War. I figured that by posting C.I.'s Iraq snapshot, I'd be doing something to keep attention on the war. I thought I could offer recipes because no one was doing that in the community at that time. (Ann now does recipes from time to time. I always try to highlight her recipe posts but I'm sure I miss some or forget some.) My point was that the economy is bad and that if you can cook some easy basics then you should be able to save a little money and get a little more nutrition.
Since I started that site, I've also done contributions to Polly's Brew and Hilda's Mix -- two community newsletters. For Hilda's Mix, I team with three community members who are new cooks and we discuss cooking for twelve months with a column for each week. I've been doing that for probably eight years. And it's been fun and it's also been a learning experience.
New cooks do not take to "butterfly the chicken" -- in fact, you might as well be using a Julia Child voice because it's just not going to reach most beginning cooks.
So if you're looking at a recipe that you'd like to share, try to keep that in mind. I try to keep that in mind but there are many times when I have posted a recipe that I thought was simple only to discover that it was not. I grew up with a grandmother, a grandfather, a mother and a father who cooked. I was one of eight children -- and I have eight kids. I started cooking as soon as I was tall enough to be safe to cook, it was that way for everyone in my family. But I was a kid a long time ago. And there are people who grow up in homes where no one has time to cook let alone teach about cooking. That's what's great about working with three community members at Hilda's Mix for a full year, I get feedback and get to know right away if something's difficult or easy.
Violet offered a recipe that I'll share. This is from Campbell Soup's webpage and it's Creamy Ranch Pork Chops & Rice:
Ingredients
cost per recipe: $5.70
2 1/4 cups water
1 envelope (1 ounce) ranch dressing mix (amount divided in recipe steps below)
1 cup uncooked long grain white rice
1 1/4 pounds boneless pork chop, 3/4-inch thick (about 4 chops)
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 can (10 1/2 ounces) Campbell’s® Condensed Cream of Mushroom Soup or 98% Fat Free Cream of Mushroom Soup
3/4 cup milk
1 pinch paprika
Instructions Tips
Serving Suggestion: Serve with a vegetable blend. For dessert, serve chunky applesauce topped with cinnamon.
Step 1
Heat the water and 1/2 package dressing mix in a 3-quart saucepan over medium-high heat to a boil. Stir in the rice. Reduce the heat to low. Cover and cook for 20 minutes or until the rice is tender and the liquid is absorbed.
Step 2
While the rice is cooking, season the pork with salt and pepper. Heat the oil in a 10-inch skillet over medium-high heat. Add the pork and cook for 6 minutes or until browned on both sides (make sure the skillet and oil are hot before adding the pork to prevent sticking). Stir the soup, milk and remaining 1/2 package dressing mix in the skillet and heat to a boil. Reduce the heat to low. Cover and cook for 10 minutes or until the pork is done. Sprinkle with the paprika
. Step 3
Serve the pork and sauce with the hot seasoned rice.
Now let me harp again that: No, we weren't not all in this together. Kevin Reed (WSWS) reports:
The wealth of US billionaires has increased by a massive $2.1 trillion, or 70 percent, since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, while tens of millions of working people have faced unemployment and illness, and 724,000 have died from COVID-19. Additionally, the list of American billionaires grew by 131 individuals—going from 614 to 745—during the same period.
According to an analysis of Forbes data about US billionaires by Americans for Tax Fairness (ATF) and the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) Program on Inequality, the wealth of the richest people in the country increased from “just short of $3 trillion at the start of the COVID crisis on March 18, 2020, to over $5 trillion on October 15 of this year,” and this wealth is “two-thirds more than the $3 trillion in wealth held by the bottom 50 percent of U.S. households estimated by the Federal Reserve Board.”
US billionaire wealth increased 70 percent since the start of the pandemic An analysis of Forbes billionaire wealth data shows that the richest Americans have increased their personal for...
In an accompanying press release, the ATF and IPS state that the “great good fortune of these billionaires over the past 19 months” is in stark contrast with the “89 million Americans [who] have lost jobs, over 44.9 million [who] have been sickened by the virus” and the nearly three-quarters of a million who have died from it.
The billionaire who increased his wealth the most is Elon Musk. The wealth of the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX grew by an incredible 751 percent during the pandemic, from $24.6 billion to $209.4 billion. Musk became the wealthiest individual in the country, beating out Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos, who went from $113 billion to $192 billion, or a 70 percent increase over the 19-month period.
Other top billionaires who increased their wealth significantly during the pandemic include the founders of Google (now Alphabet, Inc.) Larry Page and Sergey Brin, who saw their fortunes rise by 137.2 percent to $120.7 billion and 136.9 percent to $116.2 billion, respectively. Phil Knight, founder and chairman emeritus of Nike, Inc., nearly doubled his wealth since March 2020 from $29.5 billion to $57.9 billion.
We weren't all this together. We The People suffered -- and continue to suffer, the pandemic is not over -- while the greedy grabbed up every nickel they could.
They fed us the garbage of 'we're all in this together' while they robbed us blind. No wonder Americans are striking.
This is C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot" for Wednesday:
Wednesday, October 20, 2021. This just in, Colin The Blot Powell remains dead.
In breaking news, War Criminal Colin Powell is still dead.
Despite the corporate press and other idiots presenting him as their own personal Jesus Christ, Colin has not risen. It's day three and he has not risen.
Repeating, War Criminal Colin Powell remains dead.
He has not risen. Apparently saddened by that development, 'leading' periodicals on the 'left' remain silent: THE PROGRESSIVE and THE NATION. And Katrina, get better journalists for your entertainment coverage. Click-biat garbage about shows that undermine values? There are many reasons Donald Trump became president. People voted for him, to be sure, and Hillary Clinton refused to take her ass where it needed to go (if campaigning tires you, don't run for office), etc. The long list also includes what was endorsed as 'entertainment' and what the glorified. Stop worrying about what video games kids are playing and start contemplating the real damage grown adults do when they promote certain TV shows as admirable.
Ted Rall (COUNTERPUNCH) notes:
It would be impossible to overstate the import of Powell’s February 2003 speech, in which he claimed that the United States had amassed a stockpile of evidence that proved that Iraq had retained chemical and biological weapons of mass destruction in violation of its commitments under the 1991 Gulf War ceasefire. Iraq’s government, Powell argued forcefully, presented such a clear and present danger to its neighbors that the international community—led by the U.S.—had a right, even a duty, to remove it with an invasion. President George W. Bush and his co-conspirators had spent the better part of the previous year working to convince Americans to support a second war against Iraq over WMDs. Polls showed that voters remained unconvinced.
Possibly in preparation for a 2004 White House run—hard to imagine in these polarized times, but the ex-general had long been considered a top presidential prospect by both major political parties—the even-tempered Powell had previously distanced himself from his fellow cabinet members, dominated as they were by neoconservative hotheads, throughout the first two years of his term. Powell’s credibility towered over everyone else in American politics to an extent rarely seen before and certainly never since.
When you join a gang, you’re required to prove your loyalty. “You’ve got high poll ratings,” Vice President Dick Cheney told Powell as he ordered him to support the push for war. “You can afford to lose a few points.”
Which is why Bush and Cheney sent him to the U.N. They knew that Powell alone could close the deal with a public made recalcitrant by historical precedent: the U.S. had never before launched a full-out war without a pretext that made some sort of sense. And Where the president had failed the prestigious Powell succeeded brilliantly, with the American public as well as with key allies like Great Britain and Australia. Seconds after he stopped talking, TV talking heads told us what we already knew: the fate of a million Iraqis was sealed. We were going to war.
Binoy Kampmark (DISSIDENT VOICE) notes:
The Secretary of State also ran with the al-Qaida-Iraqi connection, another spurious link manufactured in the aftermath of 9/11 linking the terrorist attacks to Baghdad. “Iraqi officials deny accusations of ties with al-Qaida. These denials are simply not credible.” His UN speech makes special reference to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, suggesting that al-Qaida “affiliates based in Baghdad now coordinate the movement of people, money and supplies throughout Iraq for his network”.
Powell spent subsequent years calling his presentation “painful”, a “blot” that would “always be part of my record.” But ever mindful of public relations, he could find other more worthy alibis for his conduct. Blame could be saddled and pinned down elsewhere – for instance, upon the more nefarious Donald Rumsfeld. Or the devious Vice President Dick Cheney, whose office authored the speech.
For those keen to confine the scope of Powell’s errors and assessments, it is also worth remembering that the taste for regime change did not stop with the placing of boots in Mesopotamia. As chair for the Bush’s Commission for Assistance to a Free Cuba, Powell oversaw the production of a 2004 report advocating various ways the Cuban government might be overthrown. These were familiar: insinuating market capitalism into the state; introducing multi-party elections; giving Cuban Americans living in the US restitution for losses suffered under the Castro regime. Accordingly, Washington should “support the Cuban people as they … work to transform themselves” and enable them “to develop a democratic and civic culture … and the values and habits essential to both.” Such mindful benevolence.
With the imperium in respectful lockstep and sighing deferentially to a departed soldier, Powell’s blemishes can be overlooked by glowing reference to his “service” and patriotism. But in performing that service, Powell’s legacy will be associated with the murderous, not infrequently incompetent adventurism of US foreign policy and its messianic bent.
Colin is responsible for the deaths of over one million Iraqis. He is responsible for encouraging hate against the LGBTQ community and for harming LGBTQ members of the US military. He plotted to overthrow Cuba. He lied and covered up a massacre in Vietnam. Those are just the big marks, the well knowns. Yet THE INTERDCEPT wants to tell you he was a "nice man." And THE NATION and THE PROGRESSIVE don't wnat to comment and would rather spend their time 'covering' NETFLIX.
You're not just seeing the collapse of corporate media, you're also seeing the reality of beggar media -- you know, the ones who call themselves 'independents' because they're always begging you for money to pay their bills. And what are you paying for? So they can cover NETFLIX?
Certainly not so that they'll cover the Iraq War because they don't even know that it continues. Qassim Abdul-Zahra and Zeina Karam (AP) report:
Word of his death Monday at age 84 dredged up feelings of anger in Iraq toward the former general and diplomat, one of several Bush administration officials whom they hold responsible for a disastrous U.S.-led invasion that led to decades of death, chaos and violence in Iraq.
His U.N. testimony was a key part of events that they say had a heavy cost for Iraqis and others in the Middle East.
“He lied, lied and lied,” said Maryam, a 51-year-old Iraqi writer and mother of two in northern Iraq who spoke on condition her last name not be used because one of her children is studying in the United States.
“He lied, and we are the ones who got stuck with never-ending wars,” she added.
Please, Coiln worshippers in the US, don't let the realities that Iraqis have suffered from make you enjoy your continuous moments of worship any less. It is, after all, all about the joy you feel in the safety of the distant land and not about the people whose lives were actually destroyed by Colin Powell, right? (That was sarcasm.)
New York Governor Kathy Hochul has declared that Colin died due to someone who did not receive the COVID-19 vaccine. Glenn Greenwald notes:
Given that the CDC changed its masking guidelines based on its view that fully vaccinated people can still contract and transmit the virus to others, how does
know that Colin Powell got COVID from an unvaccinated person? Did she just make this up?
And:
It's somehow fitting, isn't it, that when a government official comments on Colin's death, they make claims that they can't back up? As he was in life, so he is in death.
We'll continue to follow this story for any developments; however, as of today, Collie The Blot Powell, despite the constant press liturgy, has not risen and remains dead.
Turning to the land Colin helped destroy, Iraq. Two Sundays ago, elections were held. In useless filing after useless filing, so-called journalists yammered away about this or that but refused to note the problem Human Rights Watch had called attention to ahead of the election. Today, Human Rights Watch's Belkis Wille writes:
In the weeks leading up to the October 10 parliamentary elections, Iraq’s Independent High Electoral Commission (IHEC) promised to take steps to ensure people with disabilities could vote.
But on election day, videos circulated suggested IHEC’s promises to make polling places accessible, with ballot boxes on the ground floor, went unfulfilled. A week later, we spoke to Haidar Jassim, 40, who has a physical disability. Here is what he said:
I was so optimistic when I heard IHEC would make polling places accessible to people with disabilities.
At 11:30 a.m. on election day, I went to the polling place in my Baghdad neighborhood, in my wheelchair, full of hope that I would be able to vote. I showed my voter ID to two IHEC staff. One looked at me and said, you have to make it to the second floor. I asked if I could vote without going to the second floor. The head of the polling place said they could not move the ballot boxes downstairs, but that I could come back later in the day and he would try to think of a solution. I told them about the IHEC announcement. He said he had no information about it.
Another staff person said, “Let me give you some advice, just go back home. Your vote won’t make a difference anyway.” I was shocked. I explained that I want to exercise and enjoy my rights like anyone else. I can only conclude that he and his colleagues do not consider us to be human beings with the same rights. He then told an older man in a wheelchair to also go home without voting, and left.
I went home and changed my electric wheelchair to a lighter, manual one, and went back to the polling place with my cousin. With help from another IHEC employee, they carried me to the second floor, and I was finally able to vote.
Sadly, I know many people with disabilities who couldn’t vote in Baghdad because the polling places were not accessible.
The IHEC should explain to Haidar, and everyone it let down on election day, why did it not implement its limited promises around accessibility, and what it is planning to do before the next elections to make sure this doesn’t happen again.
Meanwhile ALJAZEERA reports:
Hundreds of supporters of Iraq’s powerful Hashd al-Shaabi – a pro-Iranian former paramilitary force – protested on Tuesday against “fraud” at recent parliamentary elections in which their movement performed poorly.
The Conquest (Fatah) Alliance, the political arm of the multiparty Hashd, won about 15 seats in the October 10 vote, according to preliminary results.
In the last parliament, it held 48 seats, making it the second-largest bloc.
Several hundred Hashd al-Shaabi supporters gathered on a Baghdad street leading to the entrance of the high-security Green Zone, home to the US embassy, other diplomatic missions, and government offices.
Don't be surprised if protests continue over the count. Don't be surprised that the electoral commission has further undermined the trust of the Iraqi people. Over the weekend, Dilan Sirwan (RUDAW) reported, "The Iraqi electoral commission announced the official preliminary results of the Iraqi parliamentary elections late Saturday night, following the manual recount of votes from thousands of polling stations."
So that's what they announced, now let's deal with reality. The same commission announced ahead of the elections (last Sunday), that they would announce the results the following day. That would have been Monday. There was no reason to have made such an announcement or such an absurd claim. But they made it. And they didn't keep it.
The Commission shouldn't have made the promise to begin with but they did. They told the Iraqi people it would be done on Monday and it wasn't. They did this in an environment of distrust. Going into the election, in the months leading up, it was known that a growing distrust of the government was going to lead to a depressed turnout. It was known. The last thing needed was for any other government body to make a promise that they couldn't keep. In this environment, the commission made a promise that it should have known (and probably did know) it couldn't keep.
That was dangerous, that was stupid and it was uncalled for.
Outside of Iraq, if most people even know the above, that's all they likely know. But if you live in Iraq, you know a lot more. More than we could ever, ever list. But we'll note one more thing. Three years ago, there was parliamentary election in Iraq. The results were hotly contested. The commission promised a manual recount. Any of this sounding familiar because, for some reason, western outlets have amnesia and are stupidly unaware of it. So there was going to be a manual recount. How did that turn out?
It didn't.
The commission halted it. Half the ballots were in a Baghdad warehouse that just happened to catch fire meaning no complete manual recount could be done.
In this environment, you do not make a promise you can't keep.
But there's no accountability in Iraq -- and the celebration and worship of War Criminal Colin Powell makes clear that there's little accountability anywhere.
The following sites updated: